
University of Mississippi eGrove Honors College (Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors Theses Honors College) Spring 5-1-2021 ‘Con Los Brazos Abiertos’: Venezuelan Migration and the Humanitarian State Under Ecuador's Moreno Administration Madeline Cook Follow this and additional works at: https://egrove.olemiss.edu/hon_thesis Part of the Latin American Studies Commons, Law and Politics Commons, Law and Society Commons, Migration Studies Commons, and the Public Policy Commons Recommended Citation Cook, Madeline, "‘Con Los Brazos Abiertos’: Venezuelan Migration and the Humanitarian State Under Ecuador's Moreno Administration" (2021). Honors Theses. 1892. https://egrove.olemiss.edu/hon_thesis/1892 This Undergraduate Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Honors College (Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College) at eGrove. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of eGrove. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ‘CON LOS BRAZOS ABIERTOS’: VENEZUELAN MIGRATION AND THE HUMANITARIAN STATE UNDER ECUADOR’S MORENO ADMINISTRATION By Madeline A. Cook A thesis presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for completion of the Bachelor of Arts degree in International Studies Croft Institute for International Studies Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College The University of Mississippi Oxford, MS May 2021 Approved By ______________________________ Advisor: Dr. Marcos Mendoza Reader: Dr. Oliver Dinius Reader: Dr. Gregory Love i © 2021 Madeline A. Cook ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This thesis was an arduous undertaking in a difficult year, and would not have been possible without the support of my friends, family and professors. I want to thank my advisor, Dr. Mendoza, for taking me on, for evolving with me as the original project abruptly changed course, and for all your support this year. Thank you to my readers, Dr. Dinius and Dr. Love, for your time and expertise. I thank the Stamps Foundation for seeing something in me, and for the funds that allowed me to study on three continents and explore interests that taught me so much about the world and myself. I thank the Croft Institute and all its faculty for the knowledge and mentorship in which I’ve shared in these four years. I leave the University of Mississippi with a deep and humble gratitude for my experiences here. A big bear-hug and thank you to my parents, Steve and Monica Cook, for their endless encouragement in the lowest moments of this process, and to all my family. I thank my friends for listening to me talk about this work for an entire calendar year, your advice was grounding and invaluable. Finally, I thank the people who cared for me for eight months and infinitely enriched my time in Ecuador, Jassi and Pato. iii ABSTRACT In its 2008 Constitution, Ecuador enshrined radically inclusive principles of universal citizenship and legal protections for migrants, written in a moment of historic Ecuadorian emigration. Yet in the wake of the Venezuelan migrant crisis and President Lenin Moreno’s shift towards austerity, how has his administration (2017-2021) responded to the Venezuelan migration in policy and in political discourse? Through an analysis of legal documents including ministerial agreements, legislation, executive decrees, and the VERHU visa, this paper outlines a pattern of legal restrictions levied on Venezuelan migrants. Additionally, this paper employs a qualitative content analysis of the Moreno administration’s political discourse, including state actors’ speeches, interviews and tweets discussing Venezuelan migrants. I found that the Moreno administration uses logics of “control in order to protect” in justifying legal restriction to Venezuelan migrants’ entry to Ecuador, and in public discourse, the state frames Venezuelan migrants as victims of a despotic Maduro regime and recipients of Ecuadorian benevolence, thus constructing Ecuador as a ‘humanitarian state’ in public imagination. When there are points of divergence from this characterization of vulnerable migrants in moments of violence, actors employ criminalizing language but preserve a distinction for an ‘innocent’ Venezuelan migrant, too. Through a migration management perspective, I conclude that humanitarian rhetoric is invoked to cloak legal restrictions while maintaining the appearance of Ecuador as a humanitarian state. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION Methodology ............................................................................................................................... 4 Argument .................................................................................................................................... 6 Contribution to Scholarship ........................................................................................................ 7 Overview of the Thesis ............................................................................................................... 8 CHAPTER II: LITERATURE REVIEW Introduction ................................................................................................................................. 9 General Migration Theory .......................................................................................................... 9 Migration Management ............................................................................................................. 10 Regional Migration Governance ............................................................................................... 13 My Contribution to Existing Scholarship ................................................................................. 15 CHAPTER III: LAW AND MIGRATION RESTRICTION Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 17 Ministerial Agreements and Legal Challenges ......................................................................... 17 Decreto 826 and the Visa de Excepción por Razones Humanitarias (VERHU) ...................... 24 Criminality and Securitization in Proposed Reforms to the Ley de Movilidad Humana ......... 27 Conclusion ................................................................................................................................ 29 CHAPTER IV: VENEZUELAN MIGRANTS IN STATE DISCOURSE Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 31 The Timing of Political Discourse on Venezuelan Migration .................................................. 32 Ecuadorian Generosity and the Construction of the Humanitarian State ................................. 34 “Íbamos a ser Venezuela” ......................................................................................................... 38 Ecuador as Country of Migrants: The Roots of Humanitarian Migration Policy ..................... 41 Discursive Ruptures: Criticisms of Migrants beyond Humanitarian Framing ......................... 43 Conclusion ................................................................................................................................ 48 CHAPTER V: CONCLUSION..................................................................................................... 50 BIBLIOGRAPHY ......................................................................................................................... 53 v CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION In 2008, Ecuador was the first nation in the world to explicitly include migrants as a protected class in its progressive new constitution, which delineated the inherent right to migration, promoted the concept of universal citizenship, and enshrined the same rights for citizens and non- citizens alike. In January 2017, Ecuador’s legislative body passed the Law of Human Mobility which further promised ideals of universal citizenship and free movement, and broadly defined forced displacement to the benefit of those fleeing generalized violence. On paper, the state’s protections are robust. When I lived in Quito this past academic year, August 2019 to March 2020, an emerging dynamic clearly challenged these progressive migration ideals. Between 2015 and 2020, more than 1.7 million Venezuelans entered Ecuador, with approximately 377,000 settling in the country; in 2019, approximately 2,000 Venezuelans entered Ecuador each day. International migration agencies such as the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) estimate 5.4 million Venezuelans have left Venezuela as a result of deep economic, political and social turmoil in the country, with roughly 4 million staying in the region, walking hundreds of miles along highways with few possessions. In Quito, I frequently saw buskers with woeful signs and songs about Venezuela crowding stop-lights and 1 bus-stations. Even the kindest members of my host-family blamed everything from the rise in petty crime to the October 2019 protests on ‘infiltrating’ Venezuelan migrants. For this highly visible, highly vulnerable population, human rights and universal citizenship seemed to be the last thing on anyone’s mind. This research study explores Ecuador’s migration policy in the face of immense Venezuelan migration, how Venezuelan migrants are constructed in the national narrative, and how the Lenín Moreno administration (2017-2021) frames both the migrants and themselves as Ecuadorians. The primary research question is:
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